Tuesday 22 October 2013

Lose/lose situation


It was only a few months ago when we witnessed dollar domination but now with cable above 1.61 and EUR/USD reaching for 1.37, it all seems like a distant memory. Initially the Fed tapering debate was steering the greenback to victory, and although we all knew the US had to raise the debt ceiling, it didn’t seem like such a big deal. How wrong we were! The US government managed to raise the debt ceiling before the Oct 17 soft deadline, which wasn’t really a major surprise at all. To think that the US government would go into shutdown was not shocking, but to see the government default on its debt was unthinkable. Although the government pushed the deal to the brink of the deadline, the market wasn’t as shaken as dollar weakness would suggest, and seemed pretty confident an agreement would be made.

So what’s the problem? The problem is that the issue has not exactly gone away. Once the democrats and republicans agreed a deal, the dollar shot up. That was short-lived, and should rather be viewed as a little sign of relief. It didn’t take long for those losses to be reversed and it almost seemed like the US government had not come to an agreement at all. Lifting the debt ceiling till February did half the job; it removed the risk of default but only in the short term. The fact that we may have to revisit this situation again come early next year is what is troubling. The budget deal meant no default and the possibility of a future default, all at the same time.

The shutdown that lasted 16 days is likely to have hampered growth in the US, which has consequences for the Federal Reserve. The health of the US economy has been clouded by the partial shutdown, and so the central bank may need to wait until next year to warrant a reduction in stimulus. Considering this has been the backbone of dollar strength this year, the odds are no longer in the greenback’s favour. The days where strong non-farm payrolls could easily encourage a stronger dollar may have faded for now. Economic fundamentals need to produce some stellar results to see a bounce in dollar momentum, and reignite the tapering debate that has backed the strong dollar performance we saw some months back.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst